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Oregon Gov. Kotek begins closed-door meetings meant to come up with a plan to save Portland [1]

['Julia Shumway', 'More From Author', '- August']

Date: 2023-08-23

PORTLAND – In a closed-door meeting with more than 40 business leaders, community advocates and local, state and federal elected officials on Tuesday, Gov. Tina Kotek laid out a challenge: Within the next three months, the group will come up with a plan to save downtown Portland.

Portland’s problems, particularly since the COVID-19 pandemic began, have been well-documented. Offices sit unused and empty after employees switched to working from home. Tents and trash line streets, and public drug use has skyrocketed since the state decriminalized possession of small amounts of drugs in 2020. The city has experienced record-breaking numbers of homicides in the past three years.

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Kotek, who has spent much of her first year in office traveling the state and meeting with local leaders in each county, described Portland’s success as a matter of statewide economic concern.

“Everyone cares about what’s happening in Portland,” Kotek said. “They know that the success of Portland is good for the entire economy of the state. It is our entry point for tourists; it’s our cultural hub.”

Task force will present downtown Portland plan at Oregon Leadership Summit

She’s co-chairing the Portland Central City Task Force with Dan McMillan, president and CEO of The Standard, a Portland-based insurance company. The group will meet twice more, in September and October, and present a final plan at the Oregon Business Plan’s annual Oregon Leadership Summit, a December event that draws top executives and government officials from around the state.

The task force is meeting behind closed doors, but Kotek and McMillan plan to hold press conferences after each meeting. Kotek defended the private meetings to reporters, saying people need to be able to have “frank, confidential conversations.”

“But the information that will come out will definitely be made public,” she added. “It’s not like we’re hiding what the conversations result in and the recommendations and the action plan, so that will be very public as we go forward.”

Most work will be done by five subcommittees focused on community safety, livability, housing and homelessness, taxes and the area’s “value proposition.”

The issues facing Portland as it recovers from the pandemic are similar to issues facing other large cities, especially ones with downtown cores full of offices. Many employees left their downtown offices with the COVID pandemic in 2020 and have not returned full-time, sticking to fully remote work or hybrid schedules that bring them in two or three days a week.

At noon on Tuesday, the area surrounding the office building where the group met was closer to a ghost town than the bustling downtown of a major city. Most of the office towers had signs advertising retail space available to rent and few people wandered the streets just blocks from a riverfront park.

Downtown Portland will need to shift away from relying on commercial offices, McMillan said.

“We see a different mix in the future where you have a vibrant mix of the arts, services, some offices as well as residential,” McMillan said. “That will take some time to change, but we do see this whole downtown core mix changing over time, and I think that’s part of the vision.”

Who is on the Portland Central City Task Force? Gov. Tina Kotek named members of the task force Tuesday morning. She and Standard CEO Dan McMillan will co-chair it. Other members are: U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden

U.S. Rep. Earl Blumenauer

U.S. Rep. Suzanne Bonamici

State Rep. Janelle Bynum, D-Clackamas

State Rep. Rob Nosse, D-Portland

State Rep. Tawna Sanchez, D-Portland

Metro Council President Lynn Peterson

Multnomah County Chair Jessica Vega Pederson

Multnomah County District Attorney Mike Schmidt

Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler

Oscar Arana, Native American Youth and Family Services

Candace Avalos, Verde

Kimberly Branam, Prosper Portland

Jessie Burke, Society Hotel in Old Town

Kimberly Cooper, Fortuna Group

Kathryn Correia, Legacy Health

Graciela Cowger, Schwabe

Patrick Criteser, Tillamook County Creamery Association

Ann Cudd, Portland State University

Nicole Davison León, Hispanic Metro Chamber

Stacey Dodson, US Bank

Brian Ferriso, Portland Art Museum

Ernesto Fonseca, Hacienda CDC

Robert Gootee, Moda Health

Erin Graham, Oregon Museum of Science and Industry

Stephen Green, Business for a Better Portland

Dewayne Hankins, Portland Trail Blazers

Nkenge Harmon Johnson, The Urban League

Andrew Hoan, Portland Metro Chamber

Duncan Hwang, Metro Council, and Asian Pacific American Network of Oregon

Renée J. James, Ampere Computing

Cobi Lewis, Micro Enterprise Services of Oregon

Nolan Lienhart, ZGF Architects

Jim Mark, Melvin Mark

Jan Mason, Mackenzie, Philippine American Chamber of Commerce of Oregon and Greater Portland Economic Development District

Jeff Miller, Travel Portland

Andy Mendenhall, Central City Concern

Lance Randall, Black Business Association of Oregon

Curtis Robinhold, Port of Portland

Lisa Schroeder, Mother’s Bistro

Alando Simpson, City of Roses Disposal & Recycling

Vanessa Sturgeon, TMT Development

Michelle Weisenbach, Wells Fargo Commercial Banking, Greater Portland Inc Chair

Charles Wilhoite, Willamette Management

The Oregon Capital Chronicle, like the Idaho Capital Sun, is part of States Newsroom, a network of news bureaus supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Follow Oregon Capital Chronicle on Facebook and Twitter.

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